You can, if the firewall is a routing device as well. To separate your private network from the outside internet (public), you need a router, or, for example, a Cisco PIX firewall, which also serves as a router.
Agreed. A few years ago, everyone had a router then the firewall. The main reason for that was, most of the internet connections were BRI, T1, or fractional T1. You typically needed something other than a firewall to terminate the internet connection to. Now, that same router could have been used as a firewall as well, just not as good of a firewall. Eventually, Cisco and other router manufacturers started adding firewall feature sets to their routers for the added functionality of the better firewall.
But just one more question. In my last place of work the ISP connection handed off to an internet routers outside interface on 1 Telco IP address range and our Public address pool was then behind that and assigned on the inside interface of the Router and the outside of the firewall.
Is this kind of setup normal? And if so how could you connect this directly in to a firewall? In other words where would you assign the public address if the Outside interface of the firewall is directly connected to the ISP?
Sorry for the confused message I hope you can decipher what I am trying to get across.
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